Try loading this normal .jpg file in Internet Explorer 6.0. I get an error saying the picture won\'t load. Try it in any other browser and it works fine. What\'s wrong? The
It won't load in IE7 on my Vista x64 box. Also Paint.net won't save the file, saying "There was an unspecified error while saving the file."
EDIT:
In paint.net I did a Select All, New File, Paste, Save, and now it works fine. I'm guessing that file has some weird corruption.
The file is probably not a fully valid JPG and IE6/7/8 (I tested on IE8 and it wont load). Other browsers are a bit more defensive and can load it, but perhaps IE team choose not to load it as it could be invalid in a way that causes a security hole.
As Ryan Fox says, open it in an editor and re-save it ... where did the image come from, if it came from an editor dont use that editor again.
Edit: I opened it an Paint Shop Pro and it had an unknown color palette so had to convert it ... perhaps that is the problem. You could report it as a bug to the IE team and see what they say.
Maybe it is related to this: http://photo.net/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=003j8d
The JPG you uploaded is in CMYK, IE and Firefox versions before 3 can't read these. Open it using Photoshop (or anything similar, I'm sure GIMP would work too) and resave it in RGB.
edit: Further Googling makes me suspect that CMYK isn't really a part of the jpeg standard, but can be shoehorned in there. That's why some software does not consider the file valid. It does however open just fine in Photoshop CS3, and shows a cmyk colorspace.
You can use jpeginfo to find out if a jpeg file is OK or not.
$jpeginfo -c blackout_thumb.jpg
blackout_thumb.jpg 240 x 240 32bit Exif N 595116 Unsupported color conversion request [ERROR]
In your case the file is corrupted which explain why some browsers cannot display it.
It is possible for other applications to register themselves as a handler for files with a particular extension. Quicktime has (or at least had) a tendency to do this with .png files, so a .png file would display fine inline in an HTML page, but with an URL referring directly to the .png file, IE would immediately delegate all responsibility for handling the file to Quicktime.
Might this be what is happening to your .jpg files? Is it only this .jpg file that you're having a problem with?